Currently reading Brideshead Revisited and Iâm really enjoying it- what are you reading at the moment? ig: studyplants
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Currently reading Brideshead Revisited and Iâm really enjoying it- what are you reading at the moment? ig: studyplants

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
Friday, 01.01.21. 12/100 days of productivity
-Did a 45 min cardio workout.
-Read the chapter on âReligious and Religionsâ in the local park.Â
-Had a bath while re-reading the Chapter about defining Religion from my âAnthropology of Religionâ class.
Thatâs pretty much it, honestly I donât feel like I have been focused enough but today was a very beautiful day energetically wise despite the lack of focus and the awful knots tying my stomach because of exam stress slowly kicking in !Â
I started my day by listening to âMass in B minor, BWV 232, 3 : Sanctusâ by J. S. Bach and this piece of music cracked my heart open. Music is a beautiful way for me to connect to my emotions and this brought tears and smiles to the breakfast table, in the most liberating and healing way.Â
âWe may as well start the year as we mean to go on. (...) And so on this first day of a new adventure, let us begin with a great big drumbeat and a choir singing their heart out. Irrespective of your religious learnings, whoever you are, wherever you come from, this is five or so minutes of music to gladden the heart and lift the soul and say :âCome on then, new year, letâs be having youâ.â
-Â âYear of Wonder, Classical Music for Every Dayâ by Clemency Burton-Hill
May this year ahead of you be a safe place to feel heard, seen and valued for who you are - just as you are.
Algumas frutas em francĂȘs
maçã: la pomme
banana: la banane
uva:le rasin
mamĂŁo: la papaye
laranja: lâorange
coco: la noix de coco
morango: la fraise
cereja: la cerise
ameixa: la prune
abacate:lâavocat
abacaxi: lâananas
limĂŁo: le citron vert
pĂȘra: la poire
pĂȘssego: le peche
manga: la mangue
Get a grade 9 in a language GCSE!
Please note:
1. These tips are almost entirely applicable to any AQA language at GCSE. 2. Modern Foreign Languages at GCSE Level is anywhere from A2 to B1 (dependant on the tier and grade) on the CEFR scale, but, there is no official equivalent.
In November 2018, whilst in Year 10, my teacher saw that I was excelling in French, with my extensive knowledge of tenses and idioms. So, she proposed that Iâd do the January mocks, alongside Year 11, despite not knowing more than half of the subject content. Then weâd see where Iâd go from there.
I followed the AQA exam board, higher paper. Specification. You can find the Kerboodle textbook I used, here. Â
Hereâs what I did:
Throughout the year, I was also studying the Year 10 content (Theme 1 - Identity and culture) in class.
In my own time, each month Iâd cover one or two units, completing the more challenging activities on each page of the textbook. Luckily, each unit was only 4 double-page spreads long.
In January I completed my mocks. This was the first time I had ever sat in an exam hall, so it was really daunting to be doing it with a bunch of kids who were older than me, even though I knew I had enough knowledge. Overall, I got a secure grade 8, in my mocks, despite not knowing half of the course content.
I also did âpre-exam mocksâ, two weeks before each exam. These consisted of specimen papers which are notoriously harder, so my results looked almost exactly the same as past papers, which was upsetting as I couldnât see that Iâd actually improved. But practice is practice!
MY ACTUAL GCSE RESULT:Â
With a lot of work. I managed to achieve a grade 9 (the top mark, higher than an A*), which was insane. Iâm so, so proud of myself, and grateful for all of the teachers that supported me!!!
^Edit from 25/08/2019.
LISTENING
In my opinion, listening is based purely on practice and knowing the exam technique that works for you.
To practice:Â
frenchpod101 intermediate listening comprehension
Going through every specimen track and listening activity I could find - pausing it after each sentence, saying it once in French, then translating it into English. Iâd do this in the shower, on the way to school, wherever.
Know your vocab!
My exam technique:
In the 5 minutes reading time: underline keywords and themes in the questions. This time goes very quickly, but Iâd also try to jot down a few synonyms in the French section too.
Multiple choice questions: the process of elimination; key vocab; negative and positive tonality and opinion words - watch out for negative structures!
Completing the sentences: note down words said in French or translate each sentence into English in your head, then remember it when it comes to writing it down.
French section: fill each sentence with key French words that you hear. Donât worry about accents, unless it helps you determine the word.
Remember each track plays twice.
READING
The January Mock: I didnât know much of the course content, so I struggled with the translation. I also circled and placed a question mark near any words I didnât know, as it was a mock and my teacher would be able to note down any translations for me. I think what boosted my grade, to a 9 for this paper, was knowledge of grammar.
T/F/NM questions are usually a gamble. Just look for explicit information and know your negative formations.
Texts change their minds often: look out for counter-arguments and opposing exclamations
Use the method of elimination for multiple choice: rule out if thereâs no mention. Be wary that a text can mention an option, but say it wasnât that.
Texts often refer to things mentioned prior.
If you know a certain type of texts are your kryptonite (it was the classical stories with dialogue, for me), then download as many of that genre as you can. Understand the way speech and dialogue works, and the structure, before you tackle the vocab.
Many say skim read and donât read the whole thing, but I found it easier to translate big chunks in my head as I went along and lightly annotate each text, which just comes with practice.
WRITING
Top tip: donât go any more than 10% over word limits!!!!!!! Teachers say they have to mark all of it - no they donât. If you do double the word limit, your last few bullet points could come after the cut-off point, cutting off access to half of the marks!!!Â
90 WORD - 99 words maximum! About 20-25 words per bullet point.
150 WORD - 165 words maximum! About 75 words per bullet point.
Which brings me to mention, that you must cover every bullet point: those are your content marks, which cover about half the marks of each question.
90 WORD Question (16 marks)
Content - 10 marks: Making sure your writing covers each bullet point enough.
Quality of Language - 6 marks: Using interesting vocabulary, such as âmalheureusementâ.
Stick to about one page.
If youâre giving an opinion, great, just stop there. If you explain it too much, you risk going over your word limit.
150 WORD Question (32 marks)
Content - 15 marks: Every. Bullet. Point. Detailed.
Range of Language - 12 marks: get in those adjectives, idioms and grammatical structures!
Accuracy - 5 marks: correct basic tense conjugations (present, past, future simple/future proche)
In order to hit all of these I came up with a mnemonic checklist, and it scored me full marks in a specimen paper I did for my teacher! And I made it into a cute phone background, so Iâd start to remember it, I still can now, hehe! You can find it here. If that doesnât work, then download it here.
SPEAKING
Know your question words! (x)
For the roleplay and photocard, my teacher printed off me a load of practice cards in bulk and annotated two or three every day, using the planning techniques mentioned below.
Roleplay - 2 minutes; can be any theme.Â
When planning, try to avoid writing out answers, but just keywords and gaps for you to fill in with pronouns or articles etc.
Keep it brief, one sentence per bullet point, but cover each part of each bullet point.Â
Photo card - 3 minutes (aim to speak for at least 2).Â
Plan with a small spider-diagram of nouns, opinions, anecdotes etc. for each known question.Â
Use one or two prepped anecdotes for the prepared questions - e.g. where you went last year, who with, what you did.Â
For the unknown questions, keep it short and sweet and fill up any time with opinions and reasoning.
General conversation - 5-7 minutes.Â
Lie and make up stories! Be creative and use the words and structures you know.
I was a little extra and I prepared every theme as flashcards. You canât get away with only revising your chosen theme!Â
I made flashcards that could cover several types of questions: I had bullet points of topics and keywords on one side and a sample paragraph on the other.Â
Pretty sure I made about 80 flashcards oops.
I also went through the mark scheme and see which areas I could secure marks in and which areas I needed to improve.
VOCAB
Learning vocab is SO important!
I started by making spreadsheets of jumbled word lists from the specification and doing a colour-coded match up.Â
You can access a pdf of all of the vocab grids here. There might be the odd word missing due to copy-pasting errors, but if so, donât stress, just look it up in a dictionary and note it down - sorry in advance!!!
Then with the vocab that I had to look up in a dictionary, I added to a Quizlet and wrestled it into my noggin.Â
You can find the Quizlet here.
Remember that:
sauf - except
puisque - since
presque - almost
GRAMMAR
To me, learning tenses was like learning formulae for maths. So find a way to learn rules like that, if itâs easier for you.
e.g. Conditional Tense = subject + (future/conditional stem + imperfect ending)*
*note that future stems are the same as conditional stems.
Know your DRMRSPVANDERTRAMP verbs, and their past participles. These verbs go with ĂTRE and always agree with the subject.
Know your auxiliary and irregular verbs.
MUST KNOW: avoir, ĂȘtre, aller, faire, vouloir
HELPFUL: devoir, pouvoir, vivre, boire, voir, dire, savoir
OTHERS: mettre, prendre, venir, écrire, lire, recevoir
I learnt these by making flashcards, and then brain dumping them on paper over and over again until they stuck - my teacher thought I was insane, madly scribbling away.
Memorise some key structures that can be used in writing and speaking.Â
If you want 7+ structures, find them here.
MISC TIPS
Always write notes about improvements and errors in practice papers and mocks.
Find a native french internet friend.
In my opinion, music, movies and TV shows arenât great for revision. However, if you begin to understand them, they are a great confidence boost.
I highly recommend the Skam France series, which you can find with and without les sous-titres (subtitles) here.
And hereâs my french music playlist on Spotify.
MORE ASSISTANCE
Iâm happy to offer my assistance to anybody who needs it, pop me a dm or an ask if you think others will find it useful too.Â
Hereâs some ways I could help:
Finding some resources about a certain topic (videos, worksheets, mindmaps) - I have them all backed up hehe
Sending you some of my past answers
Sending you pdf of my general conversation/irregular verb table flashcards
Marking practice answers
Talking to you in french
Etc. etc.
Thank you for reading! Please reblog to help any others that might find this useful. If any of the links are faulty, please pop me a dm, and Iâll get them sorted asap!! đ„
-Wil x
Mercredi 8 avril
Bon ben la vie continue... Je continue a travailler, j'ai terminé mon collÚge de rhumatologie, je relis mes cours, fais de QCM... J'ai trÚs envie de faire autre chose que travailler mais en fait je crois que j'en suis incapable. Je culpabilise de me dire que si j'ai du temps c'est pour travailler et pas pour faire autre chose. Voilà j'ai beaucoup de mal à lùcher du lest. Je sais toujours pas ce qu'il en est des mes partiels, de mes futurs stages, de comment on va les rattraper ect.
J'aimerais ĂȘtre confinĂ©e ailleurs: chez mes parents, dans une maison a la campagne ou a la limite, ici mais sans ma soeur. Ăa m'insupporte au plus au point d'avoir quelqu'un qui se couche a 4h du matin tous les jours et qui se lĂšve a 13h. Ăa m'Ă©nerve t'imagines mĂȘme pas.
En plus c'est trop bĂȘte parce qu'avant le confinement je m'Ă©tais dis que je pourrais trouver un endroit oĂč faire un petite randonnĂ©e, ahah. Voilà ça tombe Ă l'eau parce qu'avec tous les trucs qui vont se passer quand le monde va de nouveau Ă©mergĂ©, je doute d'avoir le temps.
Le soir je regarde des jeux de rĂŽles et je tente d'en trouver des manuels gratuits ahaha. Si ça t'intĂ©resse, je te conseil d'aller voir Role'N Play. C'est la meilleure chaĂźne que j'ai trouvĂ©, il y en a d'autre mais je ne les ai pas regardĂ©es, sinon je passerais ma vie sur youtube xD Ăa m'intĂ©resserait de savoir si tu t'es dĂ©jĂ intĂ©ressĂ© aux jeux de rĂŽles ou si tu as dĂ©jĂ mĂȘme jouĂ©. On pourrait mĂȘme en discuter si tu veux.
Aller bonne Ă toi!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
je suis Ă la recherche d'un Ă©tudiant français apprenant l'anglais, pour pratiquer mes compĂ©tences linguistiques avec! si vous ĂȘtes intĂ©ressĂ©, s'il vous plaĂźt reblog ou m'envoyer un message <3
â âwhen youâre a child, you learn there are three dimensions: height, width and depth. like a shoebox.â
a symbiosis of poetry, art, cinematography and my thoughts in the last spread of 2017
uva finally got some good weather, so I tried working outside đ